Second-half fade outs holding back Australian teams

By Brett McKay / Expert

After highlighting the closeness of the mid-table teams last week, the Round 9 results over the weekend brought an interesting addendum to those observations.

But three of the four Australian sides won’t need to worry about being in the mid-table group if they can’t address one significant issue.

Where after Round 8 five teams between seventh and eleventh were separated by just one point, a bunch of surprise results in Round 9 has seen the group of teams grow further down the table.

Now, seven teams between eighth and fourteenth are separated by just two points. All seven teams are hovering around the three-win mark, with some teams sitting in this grouping with just two wins, but with a healthy bonus points haul as we near the halfway point of the season. These could prove invaluable, should the Sharks and Blues start stringing some wins together through the back half of the season.

Similarly, the Bulls, Brumbies, Reds, and Blues also have something of an advantage up their sleeve, having played one game fewer than the Sharks, Stormers, and Jaguares among this collection of teams.

It all just underlines the points made last week. The top seven teams may be somewhat settled already, but even if you’re not thrilled about the prospect of eight teams playing finals in a 15-team competition, having a large bunch of teams still eyeing off the final wildcard position is actually a healthy thing for the competition.

But this is all secondary to a more important issue that has somewhat consistently plagued the Rebels, Brumbies, and Reds this season.

If all three sides don’t quickly address this becoming-alarming trend of second-half fade-outs, then finishing in a wildcard position won’t be something that concerns them.

The Rebels have lost three games in 2017 – to the Waratahs in Round 5, the Hurricanes at home in Round 7, and most recently to the Jaguares in Melbourne on Saturday afternoon.

There’s a pattern to all three losses, too. Against both the ‘Tahs and the Jags, the Rebels led at halftime, 20-10 and 14-3 respectively, and though they didn’t lead at halftime against the ‘Canes, they did lead 19-7 just before the break. Against the Jaguares, they even led 19-6 after 50 minutes, and 22-18 fifteen minutes later.

Three games in which the led comfortably, only to fade badly in the second half.

The Brumbies’ four losses have come against the Reds in Brisbane in Round 3, the Rebels in Melbourne in Round 4, then to the Waratahs at home in Round 7 and away to the Highlanders on Saturday evening.

The difference for the Brumbies is they didn’t lead any of the four games at half time, though they were right in them. The Rebels game was the only one of the four in which they trailed by more than two points at the break.

The final results? Losses by eight, 23, seven, and 26 points respectively. The Highlanders loss is made worse by the fact they only trailed by five with twenty to play. A Waisake Naholo intercept and a Ben Smith counter-attacking try within seven minutes of each other and the Brumbies were out of it. Their worst, and fastest fade-out.

(AAP Image/Rohan Thomson)

The Reds have also lost four games: to the Rebels away in Round 3, to the Stormers in Cape Town in Round 5, another heavy loss to the Brumbies in Round 8, and then to the Waratahs at the SCG on Saturday night.

The Reds have also trailed at halftime in three of their four losses – by 12 against the Rebels, 11 against the Stormers, and seven against the Tahs. They led the Brumbies – coincidentally enough – by six at the break in Canberra ten days ago.

Their second half fade-outs are just as worrying: losing by 26 to the Rebels, six to the Stormers, 24 to the Brumbies, and 21 to the Waratahs.

The common denominator for all three sides has been a fatal loss of momentum, which responding to and recovering from has proven too much for all three sides in varying state of rebuild. The Rebels are a completely different side this year; the Reds are incredibly raw as a playing group at this level. The Brumbies have more time together as a group, but are now rebuilding combinations with key players who didn’t play last season.

It’s effectively been back to the drawing board for all three sides, and that comes through in their frustratingly inconsistent results. One week they win well; the next they’re ordinary.

But all three sides can play for eighty minutes, because they’ve done just that in wins this year. When they’ve been able to control the game and play the way they want to, they can do it. It’s only when they’re unable to stem the momentum swing that games get away on them.

(Photo by Jono Searle/Getty Images)

And, funnily enough, the blueprint for what they need to do to address this might just come in the form of the Waratahs, who in 2017 seemed to find new ways of losing games in the second half, most notably in those cruel losses to the Kings, and even the Jaguares at home – the latter a game in which they managed to lose momentum swings in both halves.

Interestingly, in 2018, the Waratahs’ wins have come in games in which they’ve trailed, been level, or led at halftime. Some margins have been narrow, others comfortable. But they’ve been able to gain momentum – extend it in some cases – and go on with the job in the second half. In their five wins, their average second half has been 21 points to nine in their favour.

There’s no simple solution for the Rebels, Brumbies, and Reds, but one must be found. It’s not just handling errors, or missed tackles, or ordinary kicking, or even coaching, but it’s also all of the above.

And the losses haven’t been all together. They have been able to turn bad results around the following week.

But all three teams will be kicking themselves in July if the consistent inconsistency remains.

The Crowd Says:

2018-04-18T23:55:29+00:00

Fionn

Guest


I don't think 1 try in every 2 matches is a particularly poor strike rate. Especially if you are by far the best attacking player in your team like he is for both the Cherry Blossoms and Rebels. He's scored 4 for the season already for the Rebels.

2018-04-18T12:58:36+00:00

Cuw

Guest


really ? how many has he scored ? he has 6 trys in 19 test matches. and like 4 for bath in 7 matches. how many has he scored in auzzy?

2018-04-18T02:36:12+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


Not at all, Tony. It could be to do with click bait and then we end up with no conclusive end to it all. Mafi is certainly IMO better than that injury prone Englishman, Billy Vunipola, and anyone else in Europe. Come to think of it, he's better than any other 8 in the SH. So, Mafi is the best 8 in world rugby atm.

2018-04-18T02:29:25+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


You can't afford him, J, but he'd look very smart and at home in a Brumbies jersey. We have a vacancy at 6.

2018-04-18T02:27:16+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


I'd suggest the game plan and lack of initiative from the other players were also contributors.

2018-04-18T02:25:24+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


Something to do with lack of initiative from the wingers or any other player in the forwards and therefore simply allowing Mafi to take the initiative while they just follow and pick up the crumbs if at all. It may also to do with the lack game plan from the coaches when they should expend Mafi's energy judiciously and not largely wasted in carting the ball up from the kick-off. This why I think your comment is a little bit harsh on Mafi, Cuw.

2018-04-18T02:06:36+00:00

Malo

Guest


Nrc are changing the Comp to touch and are trying to change the game to touch

2018-04-18T00:53:36+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


Agree mate, the error counts are still frustrating after 7 games. This needs to be tidied up for the Lions game and definitely against the NZ sides.

2018-04-18T00:21:30+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


Akira Ioane needs a lot of growing up as he's still playing like a big kid and getting involved in minor scuffles to show that he can handle himself and easily gets distracted. This was the same problem I saw in Andrew Read at the Reds and now he's been overtaken by Branden Paenga-Amosa as the Reds hooker. Sad as he had it all back then.

2018-04-18T00:14:11+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


Good point, Cuw. The Kiwi players seems to see space everywhere, ie in between, around, over them or right through the defender and the buggers deliberately set out to exploit all those spaces and pull it off and consistently IMO.

2018-04-18T00:03:51+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


Except your skills set are useless if you're out of puff at the 40th or 50th or 60th minute.

2018-04-17T23:48:35+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


It is actually disgraceful that there is no Emperor Vespasian (Colosseum, Rome builder) type person in charge of NZ since that disastrous earthquake of Feb 2011 in Christchurch and surroundings. The current stadium is a pigsty IMO and should have been replaced by something at least a little bit better by now.

2018-04-17T23:41:06+00:00

Tony

Guest


oh dear Ive touched a raw nerve here. And no if hes good enough I will be only too happy to applaud and agree but imo hes not yet shown he deserves the mojo of best nbr 8 in World Rugby, its a shame hes not eligible for the Wallabies where he would be really tested in tier 1 tests and then we would know. enough said

2018-04-17T23:35:57+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


It may well be because we are expecting some kind of implosion given the thrashing by the Jaguares. I suspect that the Tahs have finally discovered the benefits of that well known Kiwi secret of getting their players fit before season kick-off and are now more able to stick to their game plans for 80+ rather than 40 minutes.

2018-04-17T21:21:10+00:00

Fionn

Guest


Don't think the comparison fits. He scores a lot of tries so his running lines very obviously are effective.

2018-04-17T21:19:35+00:00

Fionn

Guest


Well he would only be competing for 6/8 and you don't have an incumbent number 6, so he would almost certainly make it into the back-row for that reason alone. No point in discussing it any further, because some Kiwis like yourself seem to have this idea that the NZ players are better because they're from NZ. Honestly, comparing him with Whitelock and Ioane is ridiculous.

2018-04-17T21:18:17+00:00

Fionn

Guest


Read is 32 mate, and hasn't been at his best last year. He's definitely slowed down and isn't the player that he once was, as good as he is. It really doesn't matter where Mafi plays Super Rugby, does it? Or are you saying Malcolm Marx can't be the best hooker because he plays in the South African conference? Using your logic it'll be pretty impossible for Mafi to ever overtake Read as he only performs for the Cherryblossoms, a tier 2 team. No, I get it. Read is automatically the best because he is the best in New Zealand. Makes sense.

2018-04-17T16:10:23+00:00

LifestyleSpecialist

Roar Rookie


If only Tolu Latu was back playing like his early 2017 form he could be that extra breakdown presence

2018-04-17T15:47:06+00:00

Carlos The Argie

Guest


There is a Netflix show somewhere for that!

2018-04-17T14:22:41+00:00

The Neutral View From Sweden

Roar Guru


I say two wins from five would more or less guarantee that the Tahs win the OZ conference. Anything better than that and they could almost be considered a dark horse in the playoffs. We shall see...

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